Permanent Logistics Module confirmed by Shuttle manifest

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Despite NASA declining to confirm that Space Shuttle Discovery's mission STS-133 will leave the Italian designed and built Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Raffaello at the station and the latest mission information echoing comments made to Hyperbola by the space agency's ISS programme manager, the Space Shuttle programme manifest below shows that STS-133's payload is being referred to as PLM, the acronym for the Permanent Logistics Module project. This involves modifying Raffaello for its permanent attachment to the space station

The manifest also shows that Shuttle's last mission, STS-133, occuring in September but during NASA administrator Charles Bolden's interview with this blogger on Monday 12 October at the International Astronautical Congress in Deajeon, Korea he said that Shuttle would retire in 2011. Bolden is a former Shuttle astronaut and like many close to the programme probably expects slippage in the busy 2010 launch schedule

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2 Comments

Developing the SD-HLV gives you a vehicle that can launch nearly 48 tonnes into lunar orbit (with an EDS stage) or an Orion to the space station plus 25 tonnes of logistics. And unlike the Ares V, the SD-HLV could be ready within 5 or 6 years at only a fraction of the cost of the Ares 1/Ares V or Delta IV/Ares V.

Doug Booker

Perhaps by 2011 he was referring to the federal fiscal year FY11 which begins Oct. 1, 2010.

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